Painting loosely is
painting with confidence. The more you understand the process of painting
- how to begin, what to do next and so on - the more confidently you can
paint.

The essence of loose
painting is in the way you render edges.
An edge is the boundary
between one shape and another in your painting. If you begin your work with
a line drawing, the lines will at some point disappear beneath subsequent
layers of pigment. Nevertheless, a transition will remain where the line
was. It may be abrupt (a hard edge) or gradual (a soft edge). Transitions,
or edges, can also be ragged or even intentionally careless. Dare I say,
loose? If you have difficulty painting loosely, it may be that you try to
hold too firmly to your initial line drawing. You've probably heard it
said that there are no outlines in nature. Drawing outlines is a
convention we use in our attempt to contain
the shapes of things. Perfectly rigid containment of shapes, however, is
the antithesis of loose painting. Rather than simply painting up to the
boundaries of objects in order to keep from losing your drawing, paint the
forms of objects and let their
boundaries occur organically.

Your beginning lines, if you use them at all, are simply
guidelines for shape and placement. Don't fill in between outlines,
coloring book style. Paint forms. The boundaries of forms will take care
of themselves. That's the key to painting
loosely.